释义 |
untrainedun‧trained /ˌʌnˈtreɪnd◂/ ●○○ adjective - Untrained nurses are not allowed to treat patients who are seriously ill.
- The records are confusing to anyone untrained in accounting.
- Their army is made up mostly of untrained volunteers.
- But we had an untrained and undisciplined group, with too many leaders, and things started to break down.
- Its recommendations focus on dangers posed by the public's exposure to pesticides and their use by untrained people.
- Their untrained but nervous eyes, and rumour, vastly exaggerated both the ferocity and size of the advancing army.
- These untrained observers should witness a ten-kiloton explosion somewhere on Earth about once a year.
- Yet students who have completed expensive training face the same difficulties as an untrained actor in qualifying for an Equity card.
not experienced in a particular job or activity► inexperienced someone who is inexperienced does not know much about a job or activity, either because they have not done it at all or because they have done it for only a short time: · Inexperienced managers often have problems with their staff.· There are a lot of young, inexperienced players on the team. ► lack experience to not have enough experience of doing a particular job or activity: · I know Sally lacks experience, but she's tremendously enthusiastic.lack experience of British: · If Glover lacks experience of management, why was he put in charge?lack experience doing something American: · He clearly lacked experience speaking before large groups. ► be new to something if you are new to a job or activity, you do not have much experience of doing it because you have only just started it: · As you are new to the job, we don't expect you to work as fast as the others.be new to the game (=to have no experience of an activity or a business): · They're new to the software game, so they're spending a lot on advertising. ► untrained someone who is untrained is doing a job or activity that they have not yet been officially taught to do: · Untrained nurses are not allowed to treat patients who are seriously ill.untrained in: · The records are confusing to anyone untrained in accounting. ► rookie American someone who is still new and inexperienced in an activity or job, especially in a sport, the army, or the police: · Don't be too hard on the guy, he's just a rookie.rookie pitcher/quarterback/agent/coach etc: · Mariucci is the first rookie coach in NFL history to win 11 games in a row. ► novice someone who has just started doing a particular job or activity and has very little or no experience: · The Eiger is a difficult mountain to climb. Novices should not attempt it.novice to: · If you're a novice to working with computer graphics, you should buy this CD-ROM.novice skier/user/driver etc: · Novice drivers are responsible for a large portion of all accidents. ► the uninitiated people who have no experience or knowledge of a difficult subject or skill - used in formal or humorous situations: to/for the uninitiated: · To the uninitiated, most computer systems seem complex and difficult to understand.· The classes are designed for the uninitiated, starting with the basics of car mechanics. NOUN► eye· All I could see, as usual, with my untrained eye, were blobs and shadows.· There was a lot of blood lying on the surface of what might have been flesh to an untrained eye.· But he knew what he was looking at, though to the untrained eye it was just a pile of minuscule fragments.· To the untrained eye, the two products look remarkably similar.· To the untrained eye, pretty pictures count for more than interesting spectra; neither are they without scientific interest. ► to the untrained eye/ear- But he knew what he was looking at, though to the untrained eye it was just a pile of minuscule fragments.
nountraineetrainertrainingretrainingverbtrainretrainadjectivetrained ≠ untrained 1not trained to do something: untrained staff2to the untrained eye/ear when someone who does not have special knowledge of a subject looks at something or listens to it: To the untrained eye, the two flowers look remarkably similar. |